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Elizabeth502
Guest
More than challenging me, you’re challenging the CCC, and you’re arguing separate points, rather than seeing the theology of sexuality in that document as an integrated whole, which it is. And the integity of that theology is also based on the wholeness of Catholic philosophy. Were you thoroughly educated in Catholic philosophy? You call yourself an “Anglo-Catholic,” so I’m not sure if you’ve converted from Anglicanism, or what that means, and what that education entailed. But Catholic theology, proceeding from Catholic philosophy, springs from the wholeness of the human person, and how male and female are each only one-half of the image of God which is transparent in humanity as an integrated whole. It is not possible to truly understand the full picture of the Church’s position on human sexuality without accepting that the expression of complete human matrimonial, unitive love resides in that between a man and a woman, and that sexual acts apart from that complementary unity are not what is “ordered” in Divine law. Sexualizing a same-gender friendship does not render it matrimonial, or unitive, or an image of God’s completeness.Elizabeth, while we certainly agree that our sexuality has everything to do with our relational capacity, where we continue to disagree is in determining the difference between a sexual ethics based principally on choosing the right object of desire and a sexual ethics based principally on evaluating the quality of relationship desired.
You are using secular argumentation to oppose a system of thought which does not proceed from the same assumptions. By definition, the object desired is one thing that defines essentially the quality of the relationship, in Catholic thought.
You see [the RCC sees] homosexuality as a mark of woundedness–essentially, a homosexual is a crippled or confused heterosexual. You [the Roman Catholic Church] come to this conclusion because you [the RCC] believe homosexuals desire wrongly, therefore their desire mechanism must be impaired. To you, [to the RCC] the impairment is inevitably related to a lack of a certain quality of relationship in the homosexual’s formative years. Every relationship in which a homosexual engages will naturally be a frustrated attempt in the present to restore or recover something that was missing in a relationship in the past. These relationships are neccessarily inappropriate because they can never recapture what was lost, principally because they are going about it in the wrong way: they keep choosing the wrong sexual object. This is how I read your position.
No kidding.And it probably comes as no surprise that I disagree with the fundamental premise–that homosexual desire, because it is aimed toward people of the same sex, is necessarily wounded or broken. I am clearly and openly in disagreement with the catechism over this given the conclusions that must inevitably drawn and which I’ve indicated in my post above.
Moreover, if a homosexual is just a broken heterosexual, non-coercive conversion therapy should yield a demonstrably consistent high rate of success. It does not. Nor does the catechism recommend it, which it should given its understanding of sexuality as naturally heterosexual and its understanding of homosexuality as naturally disordered.
The CCC is not mainly a practical manual. It is mainly a theoretical document, setting forth principles and essential specifics flowing from those principles. You will also not find there: a full spirituality of the Ordained Life, the Married Life, or the Consecrated Life; nor a full practical manual of prayer, nor an entire catechesis in systematic theology, nor a comprehensive manual for pastoral ministry (lay or clerical). Yet lots of spiritual and pastoral and family resources are available through many Catholic resources (books, Catholic electronic media, parish conferences, lay retreats, and more). Because the CCC is not The Summa does not mean that these other Catholic sources do not recommend non-coercive but long-term therapy to uncover woundedness. I posted that elsewhere, on this thread or another.